TOMATOMETER
AUDIENCE SCORE
Critic Consensus: We Are Who We Are doesn't move mountains, but by focusing on the little details and allowing its central teens to just be, Luca Guadagnino creates small-screen poetry.
Episodes
We Are Who We Are: Season 1 Videos
Tv Season Info
Cast
News & Interviews for We Are Who We Are: Season 1
Critic Reviews for We Are Who We Are: Season 1
All Critics (39) | Top Critics (19) | Fresh (35) | Rotten (4)
It's an impossibly grand and intimate ending, one well-suited for the eight-episode story we just saw, though whether it's the absolute ending of "We Are Who We Are" remains up in the air.
Nothing about these characters seems fixed and resolved, which is why We Are Who We Are feels like such a startlingly truthful depiction of adolescence, in all its confusing, and often thrilling, fluidity.

A glorious feast for the senses and a tonic for the soul that aims to keep viewers warm as we plunge into an uncertain fall.

We Are Who We Are shines... in the contemplative and digressive moments in which the series takes a deep breath. [Full review in Spanish]
Anchored by compelling performances from Grazer, Seamón and Sevigny, who adds gravitas even when her character is peripheral, this is a fascinating and confounding watch.
We Are Who We Are is a sensuous mood piece that viscerally evokes summer in sweat, seawater and sunbeams.
Audience Reviews for We Are Who We Are: Season 1
There are no audience reviews yet. Hurry, submit your review so you can be first!
Discussion Forum
Discuss We Are Who We Are on our TV talk forum!